国际英语新闻:U.S. House approves lawsuit against Obama
WASHINGTON, July 30 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. House on Wednesday approved a lawsuit against U.S. President Barack Obama over alleged abuse of executive power.
The 225-201 vote fell along party lines, with five Republicans voting against the measure while no Democrats supported it.
Last Thursday, the House Rules Committee approved at 7-4 vote a resolution allowing the full House to vote on authorizing the lawsuit against Obama, accusing him of abusing executive authority.
The lawsuit, dismissed by Obama and congressional Democrats as little more than election-year political theater, has further deepened the dispute between House Republicans and the Federal Government.
Republicans say they are simply holding the president accountable for circumventing Congress on a major policy change related to the implementation of Obama's healthcare reform bill.
A prime example of this, according to Republicans, was Obama's decision to delay provisions of the health care law that require most employers to provide insurance coverage for workers.
Republicans were enraged when the Obama administration announced that the provision would be delayed until 2015 -- after the midterm elections this fall.
相关文章
- 欧美文化:Hungary "can't support" EU's new sanctions against Russia in current form:
- 欧美文化:UN Security Council condemns terrorist attack against school, education center in Afghanistan
- 欧美文化:Demonstration held in Madrid against NATO intervention on Ukraine conflict
- 欧美文化:Biden proposes 20 pct minimum tax on wealthiest in White House budget plan
- 欧美文化:U.S. House votes to suspend normal trade relations with Russia
- 欧美文化:German gov't approves procurement of COVID-19 vaccines until 2029
- 欧美文化:EU readies sanctions against Russia, urges Moscow to return to diplomacy
- 欧美文化:Russia's upper house approves use of military abroad
- 欧美文化:EU says to impose sanctions against Russia's recognition of two regions in eastern Ukraine
- 欧美文化:U.S. House Speaker Pelosi announces reelection bid in 2022 midterms